Related Articles

I have quite a list for this post:
John Moore at Brand Autopsy says you should read The War of Art by Steven Pressfield.
This is an older post, but the 43 Folders has best summary I have seen of Getting Things Done by David Allen.
A Thought over Coffee pulls out The Art of Powerpointing from The Art of the Start
This is another post inspired by Seth's personal MBA.

Business authors make prominent appearances in a number of magazines this month.
Titled "Getting Things Done Guru David Allen and His Cult of Hyperefficiency", Wired Magazine profiles the author and Getting Things Done in the greatest detail I have seen in the major media. Allen has a huge following in the tech community which plays perfectly to Wired's core audience.

As someone whos long believed that David Allen represents this generations
Stephen Covey/Dale Carnegie/(name-your-favorite-business-coach), it came as
little surprise to me that two of the most promising forthcoming business
titles have passages about his influence.
A Perfect Mess: The Hidden Benefits of Disorder, which is somewhat of a
cross between Blink and Getting Things Done (with a touch of Im
Dysfunctional, Youre Dysfunctional thrown in), makes a provocative argument
about the drawbacks of the productivity gurus hyper-popular system. This
book, written by David Freedman (full disclosureI have worked with Dave and
confess to calling him a friend) and Eric Abrahamson, is my favorite of all
the galleys in my office.

LifeClever has a list of 17 different interviews with Getting Things Done guru David Allen. You'll find 247 minutes of audio and over 21,000 words of text in the links provided—useful for novice and expert alike.